logo
On a trip to the beach, a sting from a KILLER SNAIL put me in a coma. A medicine cabinet staple saved me from death

On a trip to the beach, a sting from a KILLER SNAIL put me in a coma. A medicine cabinet staple saved me from death

Daily Mail​4 days ago
Tina Petway was working on a remote island when one of the most toxic creatures on the planet stung her three times.
Alone with no way to call for help, she began to lose consciousness on the way back to her research hut where she wrote a dying letter to her husband and got into bed hoping to survive.
Then 24, Petway had been stung by a cone snail. It is among the world's deadliest snails and is armed with venom-tipped stingers capable of stopping a human's breathing within minutes.
Ranging from 0.5 to 8.5 inches long and shaped like an ice cream cone, the shells of cone snails often appear harmless, and their vibrant designs attract beachgoers.
But those who accidentally collect shells that are still occupied by the gastropod could suffer a nasty sting, which have been linked to 36 deaths in medical literature - and experts say the number is likely higher.
They are found in the Solomon Islands, where Petway was working, and along the coasts of Indonesia and Australia.
Petway was stung in August 1972 but is now revealing the encounter 53 years later to warn others of the seaside dangers, as experts suggest the snails are coming to the US and are present around San Diego, California and Mexico's Pacific coast.
'I could see the tiny barbs sticking out of my finger - they looked like fish bones, and I tried to pull them out but couldn't,' Petway, an associate curator of mollusks at the Houston Museum of Natural Sciences in Texas, told the Daily Mail.
Tina Petway (pictured), from Houston, Texas, narrowly escaped death after being stung by a cone snail three times while on a trip to the Solomon Islands
Your browser does not support iframes.
'I realized I was in danger, I already was having a hard time breathing, I was having difficulty seeing.'
Through her work, Petway was aware of the dangers of cone snails, which are predators and use their toxin to immobilize fish.
While they do not hunt humans, they may deliver a sting if someone picks up their shell or accidentally steps on them.
She recalled coming across the creature while in the water. It was in the sand, and she picked it up carefully, making sure to position the shell between her thumb and forefinger in a way that wouldn't allow the stinger to reach her hand.
However, she noticed another cone snail was making its way toward her foot. As she bent down to also pick up that shell, the one already in her hand twisted in her grip and stung her three times.
'I realized that my hand was burning. I looked over and realized my hand had actually turned and the shell had moved, and now I had three tiny barbs in this finger right here,' she said, pointing to her left forefinger.
Petway quickly pocketed the snail in her research bag and attempted to walk back to her beach hut, but quickly began feeling dizzy and developed blurred vision.
As she walked, she began to lose consciousness.
Once inside, she took antihistamines - typically used for allergic reactions - in a bid to stop her airway from closing.
She also put papaya on the wound, a supposed remedy for drawing out the cone snail's toxin.
Before falling unconscious from the venom, Petway wrote a note to her husband, who was elsewhere on the island, recounting exactly what had happened and how she had tried to treat herself.
Pictured above is the shell of the cone snail that stung Petway in 1972. She kept it after her ordeal and it is displayed in the museum where she works
She then crawled into bed to wait it out in hopes she would survive. It was three days before she woke up again.
Because of the limited documentation on cone snail bites, mortality rates from a sting widely vary, with research estimating a mortality rate of anywhere from 15 to 75 percent.
Eventually, Petway's husband returned to their hut where he sat by his wife's bedside, later admitting that he was terrified she was going to die.
The recently married couple were on an extremely remote four-mile island with no hospital or advanced medical facility anywhere nearby.
During the three days Petway was in bed, she would occasionally open her eyes and respond 'yes' or 'no' to questions, her husband later told her - though she has no recollection of it.
When she finally regained full consciousness, she suffered from crippling head pain.
After another few days in the hut recovering, she was able to get transportation by boat to an airstrip from where she caught a plane to a hospital.
Petway finally saw a doctor more than a week after her sting - and the physician could not believe she was still alive.
She credits her survival to her quick thinking: 'I think it was the antihistamines.'
'I took handfuls, I just swallowed handfuls of these drugs, along with some water. That was the only thing I could think of at that time, and it saved my life.'
Pictured above is a deadly cone snail extending its harpoon-like stinger from its shell
She suffered from severe headaches for months after the sting, and it took her two years to regain use of her left forefinger. The stiffness in her hand left her dropping items and struggling to hold onto things.
Petway survived, but the snail that stung her did not.
While the creature died in her bag due to a lack of water, its shell, is on display at the Houston Museum of Natural Science.
While the experience may put many off cone snails for life, Petway said it just made her more fascinated with them - though she has learned not to pick up the toxic creatures with her bare hands.
'It just made me excited to learn more about the snail and the toxin itself,' she said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Erin is a gentle and beloved single mum in Melbourne. She's just been diagnosed with Alzheimer's at 29
Erin is a gentle and beloved single mum in Melbourne. She's just been diagnosed with Alzheimer's at 29

Daily Mail​

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Erin is a gentle and beloved single mum in Melbourne. She's just been diagnosed with Alzheimer's at 29

At just 29, Melbourne mum Erin Kelly is facing the heartbreaking reality that she's living on borrowed time. A single parent to her eight-year-old daughter Evie, Erin has recently been diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer's - a devastating blow made even more cruel by its rare genetic cause. Now she's in a race against the clock to fund the one treatment that could slow it down. 'There's no chance of me reaching retirement age so I'm doing everything I can now, while I still can,' Erin told the Daily Mail. Alzheimer's typically strikes later in life, but for Erin, it's deeply personal, and terrifyingly genetic. In May 2024, the young mum discovered she carries a rare mutation of the PSEN1 gene, one that guarantees she will develop Alzheimer's earlier than normal. Only about 200 families worldwide carry it. 'With young onset Alzheimer's, they (the specialists) said only 1 per cent of young onset Alzheimer's cases are caused by a genetic mutation,' Erin said. 'I always knew there was a 50/50 chance I'd develop it later in life. But even with my family history, I never imagined it would happen to me this early.' Erin lost her mum to Alzheimer's when she was just 17. Her mum was only 50. After further digging, she's now found out that eight members of her extended family have battled the disease too. However, the PSEN1 mutation is what makes Erin's diagnosis so rare and so aggressive. Doctors can't say much without more tests, but have told Erin that her life expectacny is between another eight to 15 years. The official diagnosis came in July, following a year-long journey of MRIs, specialist consultations and anxious waiting. It was Erin's father who first urged her to get tested for the mutation in May 2024, after she began noticing small lapses and mixed-up words, which she initially dismissed. 'A year ago I contacted Alzheimer's Australia, but they originally said they couldn't help because I didn't have a confirmed diagnosis yet,' she said. 'So, I reached out to many others including neurologists, and they all said they didn't really know what to do with me. But then I ended up with a geriatrician [a doctor specialising in the care of the elderly], and he is helping.' Despite early symptoms and a clear family history, getting answers has been slow and costly. Specialists charged up to $500 a visit. Each scan costs her hundreds more. She has since been referred to a neuropsychologist, speech therapist and dietitian - but couldn't afford to see any of them. Even a medical drink called Souvenaid, formulated to support memory in Alzheimer's patients, was too expensive at $100 a month. 'I've had to pick and choose what I can pay for. I just can't justify that as well, given the position we're in,' she said. Despite her diagnosis, Erin was told she is too young to qualify for Australian clinical trials or subsidised treatment. 'It's like they don't know what to do with me,' she said. But there is a treatment that could help, which is a breakthrough infusion drug called Leqembi. Leqembi, which is administered as an infusion every two weeks, has been shown to slow the progression of Alzheimer's by up to 30 per cent. It works by targeting and removing the sticky amyloid plaques that kill brain cells and cause cognitive decline. There's just one problem - it's only available on a case-by-case basis for people aged 50 to 90, and at a staggering cost of $90,000. 'My doctor basically said that I don't cover a lot of the criteria. But if I can supply the money, then I've got a much higher chance of being accepted,' she said. Since Evie was six weeks old, it's been just the two of them. Erin has poured every ounce of her energy into raising her daughter and building a stable life. Now, she's fighting to hold onto that life and the precious time she has left. She's started creating photo books and writing letters for Evie, capturing memories and family stories she fears she won't be able to tell one day. 'I want her to remember who I was. Who her grandmother was, too, as I'm the only one who can tell her that,' she said. A breakthrough infusion drug called Leqembi could delay Erin's symptoms by up to 30 per cent, but she is too young to qualify for it - unless she can pay $90,000 Erin's family hopes to raise the full $90,000 to cover ongoing treatments and give her a fighting chance at slowing the disease in its tracks. If treatment becomes impossible, the funds will help create lasting memories with Evie too, as well as special time together, and the chance to simply live while she still can. 'She's not asking for a miracle,' her stepsister Jessica said. 'She's just asking for more time.'

Toxic sea creatures that BURN humans wash up on U.S. beach
Toxic sea creatures that BURN humans wash up on U.S. beach

Daily Mail​

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Toxic sea creatures that BURN humans wash up on U.S. beach

Mysterious, venomous sea creatures are washing up along the U.S. coast, leading officials urging beachgoers not to touch them under any circumstances. A toxic species of marine fireworm, known as Amphinome rostrata, is armed with hundreds of venomous bristles that can leave human skin burning for hours. Researchers spotted the brightly colored worms scattered along the Gulf Coast while surveying debris on the shores of Corpus Christi, Texas. Jace Tunnell, director of community engagement at the Harte Research Institute, was the first to raise the alarm after encountering them during his routine beach walks. He said: 'It literally feels like fire for about three hours.' Though soft-bodied and only about the size of a pencil, these worms are anything but harmless. Their bristles, needle-like and nearly invisible, snap off on contact, embedding themselves into the skin and delivering a powerful dose of neurotoxins. According to experts, these toxins can interfere with the nervous system, potentially causing burning pain, dizziness, nausea, and lasting skin irritation. To make matters worse, the worms are resilient, tunnel said 'they can regrow if cut in half'. He admitted to having a few spines stuck in his hand and warned others not to follow his lead, he said: : 'They've been washing up all along my survey area, from Padre Island National Seashore to Matagorda Island.' The fireworm belongs to a larger family with up to 28 different species, many of which carry their own unique toxic cocktails. Some reports suggest reactions can range from mild tingling to extreme discomfort that lasts for days or even weeks. Tunnell added: 'Since we don't know a lot about this species, someone could have a negative reaction to it.' Though he has only personally experienced mild symptoms, likely due to his frequent encounters with marine life, he admitted his pain threshold might not reflect the average beachgoer's. He said: 'I'm known for picking up man o' wars and other stinging organisms, so I'm probably not the best judge on pain level.' Dr Jason Sevald of Palm Beach Gardens Medical Center advised immediate first aid and said: 'Use hot water, as hot as you can safely stand it, and vinegar. Not boiling, of course, but very hot water can help neutralize the toxins.' Officials have since posted warning signs at beach access points near Corpus Christi as the number of fireworm sightings continues to rise. Visitors are being told to look, but not touch. Social media has since lit up with uneasy reactions. One user wrote: 'Trust, I would never intentionally touch one in the first place.' Another added: 'Wouldn't say it is my favorite... but scary!' And it's not just Texas on alert. Related species like the bearded fireworm can appear in the Mediterranean Sea and can surface at any time of year. Tunnell explained that the worms typically arrive via floating debris covered in gooseneck barnacles, a favorite food source for the species. For the curious, his advice is simple: 'My suggestion is to just take photos and enjoy the mystery and beauty of the worm, from a safe distance.'

Lidl drops budget mattress topper designed for both comfort and pressure relief - rivalling some of the best affordable sleep brands
Lidl drops budget mattress topper designed for both comfort and pressure relief - rivalling some of the best affordable sleep brands

Daily Mail​

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Lidl drops budget mattress topper designed for both comfort and pressure relief - rivalling some of the best affordable sleep brands

Daily Mail journalists select and curate the products that feature on our site. If you make a purchase via links on this page we will earn commission - learn more If you've been looking for a new mattress topper, you're in luck. Lidl has quietly started selling a super affordable luxury mattress topper - and it's a fraction of the price of other retailers. The Silentnight memory foam pressure relieving topper is a thick mattress topper designed to improve comfort at night and help to relieve pressure on tired joints. It's 2.5cm thick, has elasticated corners for an easy fit and has a removable, machine washable cover. If you can't afford a new mattress right now or are waiting until the sales later in the year, this is a great alternative that can provide temporary comfort as it costs just £49.99. This is significantly cheaper than it's being sold elsewhere, including at Tesco, where it's £65 and Amazon (£80) While the majority of mattress toppers can't replace the benefits you will get with a new mattress, they can provide you with some relief - particularly if they contain supportive materials such as memory foam. If you happen to have missed out on picking one up from your local Lidl or prefer to shop online, these are four alternatives to consider for a comfier night's sleep. Is a mattress topper worth it? There are lots of reasons to consider a mattress topper. If you want to extend the life of an old mattress on a budget, if you need extra support, warmth or comfort at night or even if your mattress is too firm - a topper can help with that. However, if you're shopping on a budget, it's harder to find a good mattress topper and you run the risk of spending money on a product that doesn't work. While you can get a semi-decent topper for around £50 to £60, you could also spend upwards of £250 on a premium one with the best materials If you don't have that much to spend though, keep an eye out for thick toppers with supportive materials that won't go flat. The important thing to remember is a mattress topper won't work miracles on a bad mattress, it simply offers a layer of additional support and ost beds will benefit from that.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store